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Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: June 30, 1864., [Electronic resource].

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North Carolina (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): article 1
Wounded North Carolinians. We commence to day the publication of a list of North Carolina troops lying wounded in the hospitals of this city, which will be continued daily until completed.--We shall also publish monthly a full list of wounded North Carolina troops; and the lists of the wounded from that State in all the VirgNorth Carolina troops; and the lists of the wounded from that State in all the Virginia hospitals will likewise be published monthly in this paper. These publications will be very interesting to North Carolina readers, and by preserving the papers, the friends and relatives of the wounded, coming to Richmond, will have a directory to guide them to the hospitals where they are lying, without any trouble or delaya hospitals will likewise be published monthly in this paper. These publications will be very interesting to North Carolina readers, and by preserving the papers, the friends and relatives of the wounded, coming to Richmond, will have a directory to guide them to the hospitals where they are lying, without any trouble or delay.
e of the old Roman temper that grimly welcomed a triumph, and in the darkest hour never despaired to the Republic. There is nothing in the aspect of military affairs that should give the slightest discouragement to those who stand by the Union. Grant crossed the James with unsurpassed celerity and precision of movement. He assailed the outer entrenchments of Petersburg and took them. He made an attack on the second line, and carried it also. On Saturday his army made three successive attem nothing in his present position to give the slightest uneasiness, save to those who anticipated in a triumphal advance into Richmond, or are appalled at the sad sacrifices which desperate contests necessarily entail on well matched antagonists. Grant is full of resources, and his men are full of pluck. He has never yet been unequal to the emergency, and they are prompt to execute the will of a skillful leader. So in the further South. Sherman, as a commanding military genius, has no su
Washington (search for this): article 1
oyal men of Kentucky and Ohio, whose sons have baptized the hills of Cynthiana with their blood, expected it to fall sternly and at once. Washington Threatened with pestilence. Under the caption "Shall Washington become a Lazaretto?" the Chronicle gives us an article which we are not at all surprised to see. The sanitary condition of that place must be anything else but encouraging at present, as may well be inferred from the following: We need no physicians to tell us that Washington is at present in a condition bordering upon epidemic, or rather endemic, disease. The summer is now upon us with a heat which will increase rather than diminish. Our hospitals are overflowing with diseased life. A canal in our proximity is dragging along its sluggish length, teeming with prurient fifth. The city is over crowded, and fresh arrivals of all classes and conditions of people are incessantly recorded at the various hotel is and boarding-houses. Our wide streets and our narr
e Mayor, he ordered them to disinter the bodies and bury them in another part of the cemetery. This the Mayor did not do, and the surgeon leaving the post soon after the wounded having been removed, no one has enforced the demand or brought the Mayor to task for his studied insult to the Union dead. The city authorities, who are guilty of this outrage, are Perry Wherritt, Mayor of Cynthiana, and the following Secessionists, who compose the majority of the Council: Leon Cuson, L Oxley, J S Withers, W L Northcult; R C Wherritt. Negroes who tried to enter the Union army and were rejected for unsoundness have been severely punished by their rebel masters. Among well authenticated cases we note the following: Felix Ashbrook, of Cynthiana, had some slaves who came to Covington to enlist. One of them was rejected. Captain Wilson, then in command at Covington, ordered him to be returned to his master. When Ashbrook reached Cynthiana he put the slave in jail and ordered the jailor t
He has always exhibited the highest qualities of the great commander, and his present campaign has been marked by audacity, skid, and superhuman energy. He has an able antagonist, who, after being repeatedly driven to retreat, is making his, perhaps, final stand in the hill country, beyond which is a comparative plain that offers few chances for defence. Naturally enough, it will be desperately maintained, and days may elapse before we can record a further success. In Western Virginia Hunter has brilliantly executed his orders in destroying sweepingly the enemy's communications, and at the last advices was threatening their grout depot at Lynchburg it is barely possible that Lee may detach a sufficient force to inflict on him severe disaster. But we suspect that the great Virginian has his hands full, and it is foolish to anticipate misfortune, but wise to prepare for it. There is nothing, therefore, in the present condition of warlike movements to justify the slightest despond
W. H. F. Lee (search for this): article 1
ccessive attempts on the inner line, and was repulsed with heavy loss. He may have to take it by gradual approach and regular siege.--There ought to be nothing in that to discourage any right thinking patriot, for he knew beforehand that wherever Lee's army is entrenched it can only be expelled by slow work, or compelling a change of position. He may now move towards Fort Darling, and try that and seek to get up James river in co-operation with the gunboats. He may venture on another flank man record a further success. In Western Virginia Hunter has brilliantly executed his orders in destroying sweepingly the enemy's communications, and at the last advices was threatening their grout depot at Lynchburg it is barely possible that Lee may detach a sufficient force to inflict on him severe disaster. But we suspect that the great Virginian has his hands full, and it is foolish to anticipate misfortune, but wise to prepare for it. There is nothing, therefore, in the present condi
correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette, writes that the rebel ladies showered flowers and all sorts of good things upon Morgan's rebels, but abused the Union soldiers. This correspondent adds: When Gen Burbridge left Cynthiana he ordered theendezvous, and that the gang now in Trimble county, a short time ago were there, having been collected from the debris of Morgan's forces, and still threaten a descent on stations below Falmouth, on the Kentucky Central, when they think the Union guaakes them bold and defiant, taking from the hospital the rebel wounded to their own homes. The rebel women, who received Morgan with cheers, scornfully insulted United States officers and soldiers on the streets. It is useless to talk of conciliatis consuming their homes, has not been surpassed. When the bullets whistled in the streets and the town was given over to Morgan's gang, when rebel women were drunk with exultation, the Union women of Cynthiana did their whole duty to their wounded a
rce the enemy to change his front. But there is nothing in his present position to give the slightest uneasiness, save to those who anticipated in a triumphal advance into Richmond, or are appalled at the sad sacrifices which desperate contests necessarily entail on well matched antagonists. Grant is full of resources, and his men are full of pluck. He has never yet been unequal to the emergency, and they are prompt to execute the will of a skillful leader. So in the further South. Sherman, as a commanding military genius, has no superior in the ranks of either army. He has always exhibited the highest qualities of the great commander, and his present campaign has been marked by audacity, skid, and superhuman energy. He has an able antagonist, who, after being repeatedly driven to retreat, is making his, perhaps, final stand in the hill country, beyond which is a comparative plain that offers few chances for defence. Naturally enough, it will be desperately maintained, and
John Bruce (search for this): article 1
nd were rejected for unsoundness have been severely punished by their rebel masters. Among well authenticated cases we note the following: Felix Ashbrook, of Cynthiana, had some slaves who came to Covington to enlist. One of them was rejected. Captain Wilson, then in command at Covington, ordered him to be returned to his master. When Ashbrook reached Cynthiana he put the slave in jail and ordered the jailor to give him a certain number of ashes daily until further orders. The jailor, John Bruce, whipped him two days successively, and on the third day notified Ashbrook that if he whipped the slave again he was afraid he would die. I. T. Martin took back one of his negroes under similar circumstances and whipped him almost to death. Cynthiana is to day the headquarters for skulking rebels. Scouting parties have developed the fact that Waldron's mill, a few miles west of that place, is a rebel rendezvous, and that the gang now in Trimble county, a short time ago were there, ha
ursued by the Mayor, he ordered them to disinter the bodies and bury them in another part of the cemetery. This the Mayor did not do, and the surgeon leaving the post soon after the wounded having been removed, no one has enforced the demand or brought the Mayor to task for his studied insult to the Union dead. The city authorities, who are guilty of this outrage, are Perry Wherritt, Mayor of Cynthiana, and the following Secessionists, who compose the majority of the Council: Leon Cuson, L Oxley, J S Withers, W L Northcult; R C Wherritt. Negroes who tried to enter the Union army and were rejected for unsoundness have been severely punished by their rebel masters. Among well authenticated cases we note the following: Felix Ashbrook, of Cynthiana, had some slaves who came to Covington to enlist. One of them was rejected. Captain Wilson, then in command at Covington, ordered him to be returned to his master. When Ashbrook reached Cynthiana he put the slave in jail and ordered
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